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Can you ever really go home again? Thomas Wolfe said no. I wonder... I lived and worked in Boston for many years before I moved up here to the Valley. I had to go down for a couple of rare meetings on Wednesday. With one appointment at 9:30 and another at 3:30, I had several hours in between with nothing planned to do. It's an absolutely incredibly beautiful day. I have my basic climbing stuff in the truck. Hmmm...what to do, what to do?

So first I finish my early business in Cambridge, stop by a couple of places that I wanted to check out for musical instruments, ending up just before noon in Central Square near where I used to work. Perfect timing for lunch at Moody's Falafel. If you haven't eaten there and you like middle eastern food, you absolutely should check it out. They have the best falafel, baba ganoush, pita bread, grape leaves and humus that I've had since living in New York in the early 80's. They are all so tasty that it's hard to make a choice between all the things on the menu. It's a treat that I always take advantage of whenever I can. I just make sure to get there before noon or I will have to wait in a long line!

Satiated on the great food, I jump in the truck and head over to Hammond Pond. When my ex-wife and I moved to Boston in '85 we lived in a duplex about a block from Hammond Pond. I spent a lot of time over there bouldering & messing around with the kids. It was a wonderful place, no matter what time of year. I would see a few people climbing the pudding stone. I played around on it but I didn't have shoes, rope or a harness at that time so I didn't get into it in any serious way until about 1990. Once I did tho, I was over there almost every time I could. Even when I moved out to Needham and ten to Natick I spent a fair amount of time at the Pond.

So anyway, I decided to make my first stop at the Temple area and the infamous Pusherman Wall. I spent a lot of time there when I first started bouldering because it was had a lot less traffic than the Alcove, and because it was overall easier, tho higher. I was very surprised and saddened to see graffiti covering the lower part of the wall. I felt like I was looking at a New York subway car, not a rock wall in the woods. It was disappointing. Also a drag because the paint made the rock slipperier on the traverse.

I raised the IceCON rating to a 5 today. It's unusual to get a 5 rating this early in the season, but this one has certainly been special. All the climbs in the Amphitheater are IN, as is pretty much everything else at Frankenstein. It's really pretty impressive just how much ice there is out there right now, in spite of how sunny it is. Just goes to show what snow and cold will do for things. That said, we have a VERY BIG round of snow coming in on Saturday evening through early Monday. Predictions are for 2 feet, but if we even get half that it's a big deal. If you're planning on climbing on Sunday just be aware of what that much snow means and please drive safe on the way home.

I took off my shirt & the warm sun felt incredibly nice. It was great to move up & down on the rock, playing on many of the problems that I had done 10+ years ago. While sitting at the top after doing one of the middle problems I realized that no one knew where I was. Since all the rest of the problems I hadn't done were on the right side and about 25' high, I decided to give my wife a call & at least leave a message so she would know where I was if anything happened! Not that it mattered as I I did give a couple of the ones on the right and ended up backing off.

After I finished all I was interested in, I still had about an hour before I had to leave for my final appointment. So I got in the truck and decided head over to check out the Alcove. There was a time when I could manage a good number of the problems in the main area, but now I found that my elbows didn't feel all that good on the more overhanging ones. Still the traverses on the right were fun. It was interesting to find that my hands almost had a memory recall the feel of certain features. It was quite interesting. I played there for a bit longer and then decided to check on the main wall by the actual pond. I noticed a group of young people getting out of a truck with climbing gear as I headed over. There was a rope set up and someone climbing a tope rope on the left when I got to the base. There was a time when I climbed all of these problems more than one time a week and the crack on the far right side looked just as easy and inviting as I remembered. I decided to give it a try so I slipped on my shoes. The first few moves were easy and nice and I got to the horizontal stance where you have to commit to the crack. There really can't be a crack with better finger slots and it was wonderful to slot the fingers, wedge the toes, stand, rinse, repeat for 30' in that effortless way you can get when your body and mind just work together so perfectly that you don't even think about what you're doing.

As I pulled over the top someone called "Hey Bill, to a person who was setting up some other ropes. As he turned sideways I was delighted to realize that this was Bill Boyle, an old friend from my Boston Days. Bill used to work at Wilderness House on Com Ave and was the person who sold me my first pair of shoes, harness and rope when I got back into climbing in around 1990. I vividly remember going dow there that spring & buying that gear. It felt like a lot of money at the time, but in many ways was one of the best investments I've ever made. We've kept in loose touch but haven't seen each other in quite a while. We chatted for a bit and it was just like old-home-week. He was working with the kids group and I had to leave, but it brought back that feeling of camaraderie that I really enjoyed when I was living and climbing in the Boston area.

So I guess that the answer is that yes, you can go back home. It's just going to be the same - but different. And maybe I should do it more often. (grin)

Mobile Version Of NEClimbs:
Up on one of the Mount Washington Valley's finest crags and want to know what that climb you're looking at is? Or maybe you're on your way up from Boston and want to check out the Ice Report for your upcoming weekend plans. Or more likely, you're at work just want to daydream about your next adventure. Well if you have a smart phone handy, you can get to NEClimbs from anywhere you have cell service. While it doesn't offer every single feature of the site and it's not an "app", in mobile form, it does do a whole lot and is very useful. Here is the live link to the mobile version of NEClimbs:

Check it out and if you have issues on your specific phone, please feel free to let me know.

NEClimbs & White Mountain Report On Facebook:
Join us and LIKE us on Facebook. I'll try and post some interesting pix every Thursday and the latest Ice Report in the season, tho certainly not the whole Report. Here's where you can check it out:

The rules of the game must be constantly updated to keep up with the expanding technology. Otherwise we overkill the classic climbs and delude ourselves into thinking we are better climbers than the pioneers.

Climbing is a very dangerous sport. You can get hurt or even kill yourself. When you go climbing, you do so of your own free will. Everything on this site is to be taken with a grain of salt. Don't blame us if you get up some totally heinous route, in over your head and fall and hurt yourself.